439 N.E.2d 467 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1982
Donvito appeals the trial court's judgment that the real property held by appellees Barbara A. and William H. Criswell, as tenants by the entireties, was not subject to the individual debt which William Criswell owed to Donvito. We affirm.
William and Barbara Criswell were married on May 8, 1976. On April 17, 1978, they purchased a home at 700 Southwood Drive, Green Township, Ohio. The title to this real estate was conveyed by a deed creating an estate by the entireties in William and Barbara Criswell, husband and wife, as provided for in R.C.
On the basis of his October 5, 1978 judgment, Donvito filed the present action seeking to set aside the June 21, 1978 conveyance from William to Barbara as fraudulent and to declare the Criswells' home subject to the payment of his judgment. The trial court found that, pursuant to R.C.
"III. The court erred in ruling that the creditor of one spouse cannot reach the property held in an estate by the entireties created under O.R.C.
We are faced in this case with the necessity of interpreting R.C.
"A deed conveying any interest in real property to a husband and wife, and in substance following the form set forth in this section, when duly executed in accordance with Chapter 5301 of the Revised Code, creates an estate by the entireties in the grantees, and upon the death of either, conveys such interest to the survivor, his or her separate heirs and assigns."
The statute includes a sample deed which provides that the property is granted to the named parties as "* * * husband and wife, for their joint lives, remainder to the survivor of them * * *." It also provides for creation of an estate by the entireties by deed where one (or both) of the spouses is the sole owner of the real property in a form other than as tenants by the entireties. Under R.C.
Prior to the passage of R.C.
The common law required the concurrence of the five unities of time, title, interest, possession and person in order to create an estate by the entireties.1 The unity of person, unique to this tenancy, limits estates by the entireties to devises or conveyances to a husband and wife. Similar to joint tenants, each tenant by the entirety is vested with a right of survivorship. However, unlike a joint tenancy, the husband and wife in an estate by the entireties hold the property as a single entity and thus are seized per tout et non per my (seized of the whole but not of a share). Therefore, "* * * the whole estate held by the husband and wife continues in the surviving spouse, not because he or she is vested with any new interest, but because each originally took the whole or entirety to continue to the survivor. * * *" Magee, Tenancy by the Entirety: Ohio's New Estate (1974), 2 N. Ky. St. L. Forum 69, at page 73.
Joint tenants are seized per my et per tout (of a share and of the whole) and thus each tenant possesses an individual interest in the property which allows the tenant to freely alienate his or her interest, thereby severing the tenancy. At common law, tenants by the entireties possessed no individual interests in the entirety property and, therefore, neither spouse could alienate or sever the tenancy by his or her singular act.
Under traditional common law, the husband constituted the entity of the tenancy by the entireties since he had control over the property without the wife's consent. This situation changed as a result of the passage of Married Women's Property Acts in the late nineteenth century. Thus, some courts held that the recognition of a wife's legal rights in property abolished tenancies by entireties, presumably on the theory that the unity of person had been destroyed. See Yzenbaard, Ohio's Beleaguered Entirety Statute (1980), 49 Univ. Cin. L. Rev. 99, 101, at footnotes 16 and 17. However, the majority of states interpreted the Married Women's Property Acts as equalizing the rights between spouses in an entirety estate. Id. We conclude that Ohio follows this interpretation of the Acts. In support of this conclusion we refer to Smiley v. Smiley's Admr. (1869),
"* * * It was not intended by the act to create for her [the wife] new rights, but simply to take away the husband's control over such as she had."
In the present case, Donvito insists that the Ohio legislature intended to create a statutory form for the judicially recognized survivorship deed and did not intend to resurrect the common law estate by the entireties. We find his reasoning unpersuasive. He relies in part on the statement, included in H. B. No. 878 when originally introduced in the Ohio House of Representatives, to the effect that the statute would "* * * create a statutory deed form for joint tenancy with survivorship." See 134 Ohio House Journal (Part I), 347-348 (April 13, 1971).
However, the House substantially amended H. B. No. 878 prior to its passage and removed all references to joint tenancy, substituting instead the words "estate by the entireties." See 134 Ohio House Journal (Part I), 737 (July 14, 1971). This explicit modification negates any notion that R.C.
Donvito further argues, in line with at least two law review articles, that certain language employed in R.C.
Donvito also questions the use, in R.C.
The significance of the above holding, regarding R.C.
There is no question that entirety property would be subject to a debt jointly incurred by husband and wife. However, in the case before us we are faced with a debt which William Criswell personally incurred approximately 10 months prior to marrying Barbara Criswell on May 8, 1976. There is no evidence to indicate that Barbara acknowledged the debt. The grantors executed the deed creating the estate by the entireties in William and Barbara Criswell, husband and wife, on April 17, 1978, and Donvito obtained the judgment for the balance due on the promissory note from William on October 5, 1978. This is the judgment which Donvito now attempts to satisfy by execution on the Criswells' entirety property.
Twenty-five jurisdictions, in addition to Ohio, recognize a tenancy by the entirety in some form. The majority view provides that neither spouse can alienate entirety property without the other's consent. Thus, a creditor of one spouse cannot reach the debtor-spouse's interest in the estate nor levy upon the entirety property. Twelve jurisdictions adhere to this interpretation:Citizens Savings Bank, Inc., v. Astrin (1948),
We are persuaded by the majority position and, therefore, hold that, as presently constituted in Ohio, an estate by the entireties prevents the creditor of only one spouse from attaching that spouse's interest in the estate or from levying on the tenancy property. The rationale behind this viewpoint, which is well stated by the court in Sawada v. Endo, supra, is that this view best protects the family unit. Since the creation of an estate by the entireties in Ohio is limited to real property, the immunity to individual creditor's claims will most often inure to the benefit of a family and enable it to retain the family home. During the joint lives of the spouses, the tenancy property will always be available in its entirety for the use and benefit of the entire family. Sawada v. Endo, supra, 57 Hawaii, at 616-617,
In addition to the public policy arguments raised above, the position taken in this opinion is reflective of a tenancy by the entireties as created and sanctioned by R.C.
"IV. The court erred in ruling that the transfer by quit-claim deed from William to Barbara Criswell had no legal effect upon the right of plaintiff-appellant to reach the property in question."
Donvito suggests that the quitclaim deed from William to Barbara Criswell, which purported to convey William's entire interest in the entirety property to Barbara, amounted to a fraudulent conveyance. Donvito claims that William violated R.C. Chapter 1336 because the deed was executed to avoid and defraud Donvito as a creditor. Assuming, arguendo, that the quitclaim deed at issue here constituted a fraudulent conveyance, Donvito would have no better right to execute on the Criswells' home for the following reason:
"Property fraudulently conveyed * * * may be attached, is subject to the lien of a judgment and the levy of execution, and in every way is liable to be appropriated to the payment of the creditors, in the same manner as if no conveyance had been made. * * *" (Footnotes omitted and emphasis added.) 24 Ohio Jurisprudence 3d, 533-534, Creditors' Rights, Section 857.
The Criswells held the Southwood Drive property as tenants by the entireties prior to William's quitclaim deed to Barbara. Therefore, even if the quitclaim deed were to be declared void, the Criswells would still be considered tenants by the entireties and the property would be immune from Donvito's claim. Cf.Stauffer v. Stauffer, supra,
However, under existing case law in jurisdictions which recognize an estate by the entireties, the conveyance accomplished by William's deed to Barbara was not fraudulent. It is clear that, with a tenancy by the entireties, husband and wife, together, can convey the entirety property to a third party, free and clear of the claim of a creditor of one of the spouses. Sawada v. Endo, supra; Stauffer v. Stauffer, supra; andWatterson v. Edgerly, supra. It has also been held "* * * that a husband or wife may convey his or her interest in tenants by the entirety property to the other spouse, without consideration and for the purpose of preventing the enforcement of a judgment against the grantor.* * *" Watterson v. Edgerly, supra,
The mutual assent usually necessary to alienate entirety property can be implied from the grantee-spouse's acceptance of the conveyance. Hunt v. Covington, supra,
We note, however, that a tenancy by the entireties cannot be originally created to defraud existing creditors. Sawada v. Endo,supra, 57 Hawaii, at 616,
A question remains as to what the deed from William to Barbara actually accomplished. As indicated above, we find the deed from husband to wife in this case to be a valid and permissible conveyance with legal effect. Having recognized the validity of an interspousal conveyance involving entirety property, we conclude that such a conveyance works to terminate the estate by the entireties and vests the grantee-spouse with the unqualified fee simple estate. Hunt v. Covington, supra. The form of the deed manifests an intent to jointly and voluntarily partition the entirety estate. This result is not affected by the continuance of the marriage relationship between grantor and grantee. Runco v. Ostroski, supra. We find that the quitclaim deed, executed on June 21, 1978, and conveying William Criswell's interest in property held as an estate by the entireties to his wife Barbara, effectively terminated the tenancy and vested Barbara with the whole estate. Consequently, the property at issue here is held free and clear of any claim of Donvito for a debt owed by William Criswell. *59
Judgment affirmed.
VICTOR, P.J., and BELL, J., concur.